https://wallstreetonparade.com/2024/07/u-s-senate-candidate-backed-by-hedge-fund-billionaires-was-sitting-in-front-row-at-trump-rally-as-the-sniper-fired-into-the-bleachers/


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: July 15, 2024 ~

Dave McCormick, the Republican candidate for the U.S. Senate from
Pennsylvania, was sitting in the front row at Donald Trump’s rally in
Butler, Pennsylvania on Saturday and narrowly missed being in the line of
fire according to an interview he gave to CNN’s Jake Tapper on Sunday
morning.

McCormick told Tapper that Trump had called out from the podium, asking
McCormick to join him on the stage and he “started to walk up onto the
stage” when Trump said: “No, no, I will have you up in a little bit. And
then the shooting started a minute or two later. And so, had he not changed
his mind, I think I would have been up on that stage.”

According to the PBS video of Trump’s opening remarks at the rally, which
also capture the gunfire, Trump called McCormick a “great, great gentleman”
and said these exact words about him coming up to the stage: “So we’re
gonna bring him up. Can we bring him up for a couple of minutes later?”

Trump did not change his mind about the timing. He simply added the word
“later” at the very end of his sentence, a word that McCormick apparently
initially missed hearing.

McCormick is correct about this: just 2.8 minutes after Trump indicated
McCormick would be called up later, the gunshots rang out and Trump ducked
for cover under the podium with Secret Service agents piling on top of his
body.

Democrats currently have majority control of the U.S. Senate while
Republicans control the House. Flipping the Senate red while holding onto
the House’s Republican majority is a major goal of hedge fund and private
equity billionaires who are funneling tens of millions of dollars into key
Congressional races. These billionaires benefit from a tax loophole known
as “Carried Interest,” where they are able to pay lower taxes than teachers
and plumbers. The carried interest loophole has been under attack by
progressive Democrats for years, thus there is a big push by billionaires
to elect more right-wing Republicans to Congress.

A Super PAC created solely for the purpose of boosting McCormick’s chances
and attacking his opponent for the Senate seat, incumbent Democrat Bob
Casey, is called Keystone Renewal PAC. (Pennsylvania is known as the
“Keystone State.”) The wealthiest billionaires in the hedge fund and
private equity arena are major donors to Keystone Renewal.

An attack ad from Keystone Renewal uses the same demonization of immigrants
language that Trump was actually in the process of talking about in the
very seconds that the shots rang out at his rally on Saturday. (See the
video of the ad here.) The ad promotes McCormick as a combat veteran. He
is, more recently, the former CEO of Bridgewater Associates, one of the
largest hedge funds in the world.

The largest donor to Keystone Renewal, by a wide margin, is hedge fund
titan Ken Griffin of Citadel. According to records from the Federal
Election Commission (FEC), Griffin wrote out a check for a cool $10 million
to the Super PAC on September 25, 2023. In April of last year, Hank Tucker
at Forbes wrote this about Griffin:

“Ken Griffin is riding high, after posting the most profitable year of any
hedge fund in history. He’s worth an estimated $35 billion, $7.8 billion
more than a year ago and nearly triple what he was worth in 2020.”

For how Griffin is making his billions, scroll down at this link for our
extensive reporting on the matter.

Paul Singer, founder and President of Elliott Management, an investment
firm and hedge fund, also chipped in $2 million on November 2 of last year.
Jeff Yass, the richest man in Pennsylvania, has also donated $1 million to
Keystone Renewal. Yass is the co-founder and Managing Director of
Susquehanna International Group, a hedge fund and trading firm. Forbes puts
Yass’ net worth at $28.5 billion.

Other notable donors to the Keystone Renewal Super PAC include Steven
Schwarzman, Chairman and CEO of private equity firm, Blackstone, who
contributed $500,000; Henry Kravis, Executive Chairman of private equity
firm KKR, who donated $250,000; Paul Tudor Jones of hedge fund Tudor
Investment Corp. who added another $250,000 to the coffers; Thomas
Peterffy, founder and Chairman of Interactive Brokers, provided $300,000 in
support along with dozens of other notable one-percenters from Wall Street.

Of the $21.5 million that Keystone Renewal has thus far reported in
donations, just two donors live inside the state of Pennsylvania: Jeff Yass
who contributed the $1 million and a retired individual, Joseph Wesley, who
donated $25,000. The bulk of the money attempting to elect a Republican
Senator to represent the people of Pennsylvania is coming from residents of
New York and Florida. Under the U.S. Supreme Court’s twisted Citizens
United decision in 2010, this is legal.

According to Politico, citing data from AdImpact, Keystone Renewal has
booked $30 million in ad buys through the summer and fall to boost
McCormick’s chances in the November election. On top of that, Politico
reports that another Super Pac tied to Mitch McConnell, the Senate
Leadership Fund, has reserved $24 million in ad buys to help McCormick
unseat Casey. The ad spend includes network and cable TV, radio, and
digital advertising, according to the report.

The Senate Leadership Fund could be quite dangerous to the Democrats’ hopes
of holding onto the Senate and preventing the wholesale deregulation of
Wall Street, the fossil fuels industry, and other powerful industries.
According to FEC records, as of March 31, 2024, the Senate Leadership Fund
had $59.5 million in cash on hand. That’s likely a very lowball number. The
FEC should be updating that information for the most recent quarter any day
now.

The hedge fund billionaire, Ken Griffin, has given another cool $10 million
to the Senate Leadership Fund. A significant part of that Super PAC’s
money, however, comes from the fossil fuels industry, with names like Koch
Industries, the American Petroleum Institute, Chevron, and Occidental
Petroleum on the list of large donors. A Dark Money group, One Nation,
ranks among the largest donors, giving two donations that tallied up to
more than $7 million.

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